New Year’s Resolutions for First Aid: Safety Goals for the New Year

Do you have a first aid kit in the home—and would you know what to do in case you or someone you loved had an injury that required immediate treatment? If you’re like most people, you may not be as prepared as you’d like to be. The New Year is a great time to take stock of that—and make sure that if the worst happens, you’re ready. Here are a few things you can resolve to do in the New Year.

Make a first aid kit

It’s always a good idea to have one—but fewer families have a fully-stocked first aid kit than you’d think. Here are a few things that the Red Cross recommends you stock your home first aid kit with:

Write down emergency numbers

Beyond 911, do you have the phone numbers to various emergency contacts within quick and easy reach? It’s a good idea to write down important phone numbers and put them somewhere easily visible, such as on your refrigerator, so that everyone in the family can find them quickly if needed. Here are a few good numbers to include:

The number for your family doctor

The number for your veterinarian (if you have pets)

The number for your pediatrician (if you have young children)

The number for specialized doctors, such as your OB/GYN or eye doctor

The number for your local hospital

Contact information to reach you or your spouse at work

If you have children, be sure they know to call 911 immediately for any health emergency or if there’s a fire, and where to find the other emergency numbers quickly.

Take a CPR course

If you keep just one of your first aid-related resolutions in the coming year, we hope it’s this one. Everyone can learn to perform CPR, and training is fast and simple—all you need is a quick video lesson on hands-only CPR, which is easy to perform and remember.

However, studies show that over 70% of Americans would feel uncomfortable and unprepared to act immediately in an emergency where CPR is needed. This is an underreported national tragedy, because about 88% of cardiac arrests occur at home—nowhere near a hospital. Approximately 383,000 people every year have sudden cardiac arrests in the United States, and many of them appear healthy and have no prior known heart problems. If you ever have cause to use your CPR skills, chances are high it will be to save someone you love.

And effective bystander CPR does save lives. It can take emergency services precious minutes to arrive on the scene of a cardiac arrest, and the brain begins to die immediately when it is starved of oxygen. Only about 8% of people who fall victim to cardiac arrest outside of a hospital recover, but when victims get CPR immediately from a bystander, their chance of survival doubles or even triples. However, only about 32% of cardiac victims receives CPR from a bystander.

It only takes minutes to watch a video offering training on hands-only CPR, which has been proven just as effective in saving cardiac arrest victims as traditional CPR. This is an easy resolution to keep, and it might just help you save a life.

Learn first aid

It’s also a great idea to learn the basics of first aid—especially if you have children, but even if you don’t. Heat stroke, deep cuts, hypothermia, broken bones, and any number of other injuries and ailments can happen quickly and unexpectedly—and if you are ever in the vicinity when something happens, you’ll be glad you learned first aid. For a start, it’s a great idea to learn how to respond to the following:

Cuts and lacerations

Broken bones, sprains, and strains

Shock

Bites and bee stings

Heat stroke and hypothermia (depending on the climate where you live)

Frostbite (depending on the weather)

Choking

Head injuries

Burns

Take stock of your house

How safe is your house? Especially if you have small children or are taking care of an elderly relative, often the best way to keep everyone safe is to remove many of the hazards around the home that you take for granted.

If you have young kids in the home, there are a few steps you can take to make your home safer and more secure—reducing the need for first aid in the first place.

Install window guards or stops to keep children from opening upstairs windows.

Put cribs and children’s beds away from blind or curtain cords.

Install baby gates at both the top and bottom of all stairs.

Pad the edges of tables or counters in homes with young toddlers.

Keep all medications and poisonous cleaning materials out of reach or locked away.

In addition to kids, the elderly are also more at risk of injuries in the home that might need first aid—or even more extensive medical treatment. Elderly people are especially at risk of grievous injury after a fall—something that might be laughed off by someone younger. Here are a few ways you can reduce the risk of falls and other injuries in the home:

Get rid of clutter, phone and electrical cords, bumpy carpet, or any other trip hazards.Arrange furniture to make wide and accessible walkways.

Install non-slip strips on slippery wooden or tile floors.

Install handrails in the bathroom, near the toilet and in the tub.

Install night lights along dark hallways.

Make sure lights are easily accessible by the doorway in every room.

Be sure kitchen implements are easily accessible within arm’s reach.

The New Year is a great time to set goals that will increase your preparedness to respond to an injury or illness—of yourself or a loved one. Put together a first aid kit for the home, as well as mini first aid kits for travel or the car. Take a course in CPR or first aid, and make a few easy, low-cost improvements around the home. If you do, you improve your ability to keep the whole family safe.

Sources

About the author

Dr. Mary Williams, RN, DC

Dr. Mary Williams, R.N., D.C is a Doctor of Chiropractic with an extensive background as a Registered Nurse and experienced Core Instructor for the American Heart Association. She has over 30 years of hands-on medical and instructional experience.